"Four decades is long time to wait for anything, but in this
case, it was worth every minute." -- Newsweek

When I first listened to Brian
Wilson's Smile, two things immediately struck me about it: Smile
isone complete abstract pop album from beginning to end; and the
other is that the songs presented on Smile are divided into three
movements which ends up sounding like the Great American Trilogy. This writer
wasn't alone in that assessment. Peter Blake, cover designer for the Beatles
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album made comparable
conclusions: "The breadth of Brian's reference points is similar to the
Beatles," said Blake. "They wrote about England and growing up in Liverpool,
while he sings about 20th century Americana. They are songs of such pathos and
must be among the most beautiful ever written." Those feelings are not only
conveyed through Brian Wilson's use of fundamental rock structures, but
also in his usage of classical, jazz and choral arrangements which creates a
sense of surrealism found on Smile...and Brian has recorded it all in a
very fun-filled way.

Even Mojo, the highly
respected pop magazine gives Smile plenty of praise: "There is a
remarkable consistency about Smile's complex tapestry of delights. Wilson
can rest secure in the knowledge of that he's finally delivered the masterpiece
that's surely the long playing equal of that still awe inspiring 'Good
Vibrations'. Genius? You bet. Brilliant." Smile debuted at No. 13 on
Billboard and has so far sold 130,000 copies in the United
States.

But is Smile Brian Wilson's reply to Sgt. Pepper?
Hardly. The original Smile recordings were slated for a January 1967
release, several months before Pepper. In truth, the songs being crafted
at the time by Brian was an attempt to outdo his own album Pet Sounds and
the Beatles' Revolver. But Smile, whose working title for the
album was Dumb Angel, saw Wilson out of control in the recording studio
during 1966 as he imbibed hashish, LSD, marijuana and
amphetamines called
Desbutol. The substance abuses definitely
interfered with Brian's creative processes causing him to eventually abort the
project. Even today, Brian admits it was one of two factors that prevented
Smile from being realized at the time: "There are two reasons
why we junked it," Wilson told Steve Uhler for XL Entertainment, "The first
reason was we were on bad drugs. LSD, marijuana and amphetamines, and it goofed
our heads up. Then we got so far into the music that we finally said, 'Oh my
God, we're way ahead of our time here.' We felt we were too avant-garde and
advanced for people."

Brian might be
right: had pop critics
compared Smile and Pepper together during the Summer of
Love, the write-ups would likely have been grossly unfair back in 1967. It
would be like trying to compare the work between Strauss and Beethoven -- how
can you compare the two? It just can't be done. One classical composer used a
more vibrant approach in creating music by adding rich colorful textures from
his palette than did the other, yet we acknowledge both Strauss and Beethoven as
musical geniuses. Their compositions must be judged separately on its own merit.
If we take that premise, then Brian Wilson's new Smile exceeds
expectations in the pop music world. Pepper is brilliant, but so to is
Smile a masterpiece in its own unique and special way.

October 17George Harrison's theatric dream finally comes to
fruition: Cirque du Soleul to do unprecedented live theatre production in
2006!

By and large, it had been the
vision and leadership of the late George Harrison who first realized what the
enormous possibilities the Cirque du Soleul could bring to the Beatle legacy,
not to say the least their pocketbooks. The deal originally began in Montréal,
June 2001, when Harrison met up with the Cirque during a Grand Prix racing event
he had attended. At the time, leasing arrangements were discussed regarding
Beatles music to be used in a theatric performance based on the Yellow
Submarine movie. When George died, so too did the idea about doing a live
acrobatic presentation of the Yellow Submarine movie, but negotiations
continued on with the Cirque. It was finally agreed that the theatric troupe
will do a more modern themed presentation at The Mirage hotel-casino in
Las Vegas in 2006.

"George and Guy shared the
same vision," said Olivia Harrison. "They planned to utilize the
extraordinary creativity of the Beatles and Cirque du Soleil to produce an
uplifting moment in time. We are all very happy to see this project come to
fruition."

"This show is about living The
Beatles experience," said Cirque du Soleu founder, Guy Laliberte. "We want
to bring the magic of Cirque du Soleil together with the spirit and passion
behind the most beloved rock band of all time to create a single, simple
statement of delight."

The musical elements of the
show will be overseen by Beatles producer Sir George Martin. "After spending
more than 40 years of my life working with The Beatles and their wonderful
music, I am thrilled to be working with them once again on this exciting project
with the Cirque du Soleil," said Martin. "The show will be a unique and magical
experience."

Yoko Ono, who also threw in
her support for the project along with Paul, Ringo and Olivia, said: "The
Beatles and Cirque. I think it's a great combination: The Beatles' agile mind
and the Cirque's agile body."

The show will cost $100
million (£55m). A new theatre is currently being built with a 2,000 seating
arrangement offering 360-degree seating. A splendid time is guaranteed for
all!

----------------------------

October 13New Beatles Box Set: The Capitol Albums Vol.
1

Capitol Records
yesterday issued their official press release confirming a four CD boxed set
entitled: The Capitol Albums Vol. 1 will be heading into the marketplace.
The boxed set will contain the first four American albums that were released in
the heyday of Beatlemania: Meet the Beatles; The Beatles Second
Album; Something New; and Beatles '65. Both "mono" and
"stereo" LP versions will be presented and in the cases where fake stereo
was used, i.e. "duophonic" (I Feel Fine, She's A Woman, etc.) will
sound exactly the way USA producer Dave Dexter presented them back then. The
full announcement can be read by clicking on this link: The Capitol
Albums Vol. 1.

----------------------------

October 11Quick News Picks

Last week it was reported by South Manchester that Yoko Ono is in
the process of writing a new book about John Lennon. Apparently the book will be
called: Memories
of John.

On the eve of John Lennon's 64th birthday, the BBC had reported
that computer scientists at the University of St. Andrews used computer "aging"
software on a John Lennon
photograph which shows what the pop icon would have looked like had he
lived.

The song Yesterday, which was written by Paul McCartney during the
Beatles era, has been played 8
million times on radio which averages out to be 45.7 years of airplay. The
report was filed on October 6 by The Sun. Congratulations to Paul on reaching
another milestone in his career.

Speaking of milestones, the Ottawa Beatles Site has achieved one
as well: On this date, the Beatles
Timeline has now had 100,000 visitors! For an e-publication that was posted
only 4 years ago, that figure is simply amazing. What it means is that the
Beatles Timeline has averaged about 25,000 hits per year and judging from those
figures it appears that the average is substantively up from its first year of
e-publication which only had about 13,500 visitors. Hopefully the mean average
to will continue to grow as word gets out around the internet about this
historical Beatles Timeline.

----------------------------

October 5Beat Brother Roy Young performs at the Thunder Bay
Blues Festival

This past summer, Roy Young performed with the Reverb Rockers at the
Thunder Bay Blues Festival. The festival, which attracted 17,000 people, was
organized by event president Barry Streib and ran three days from July 9-11. It
was the third consecutive blues festival to be held in that area.

"The first time I walked on stage with the Reverb Rockers I had a
feeling we were totally in command of the next two hours of entertainment," said
Roy Young. "When I was sharing the stage with them, I realize the
professionalism and class of an outstanding band. This does not go unnoticed by
the audience," lamented Young. "Each player is so humble and down to earth, a
great characteristic to have."

"Genuine, always smiling, ever approachable and a terrific
entertainer, Young related a story during the course of the weekend about his
dear friend, the late great George Harrison," wrote Ken Wright of the Thunder
Bay Blues Society, "and three words of support and encouragement that he left
behind. "Never give up."" It was this tribute song to George, Never Give
Up, amongst many others that Roy Young delighted the audience with.

The Thunder Bay Blues Festival showcased a variety of acts at this
event, some of them pretty big names in the music industry: Edgar Winter; Canned
Heat; Professor Louie & the Crowmatixs with Tom "Bones" Malone; Woodstock
veterans Ten Years After; and John Lee Hooker Jr. While Roy Young was
already recruited for the Sunday afternoon performance, Roy saw himself doing
double duty work when a last minute cancellation from Eric Burdon and the New
Animals caused Barry Streib to have Young fill in for the 9:45 p.m. Friday time
slot on opening day.

A couple of objectives were set for this event: behind all these
great performers and their music, the blues festival was held to raise money for
the United Way of Thunder Bay and the Northern Cancer Research
Foundation with proceeds split evenly between them. The other objective was
to illustrate to the world that Thunder Bay is fast becoming a world-class blues
festival. Judging by the artists that came and the large audience turnout of
this past summer, it would appear that Barry Streib has already achieved many of
his goals.

Ringo Starr provides a lovely interview with CBS's Bill Lagattuta
about his new book, Postcard from the Boys. The write-up reports that
Ringo is currently working on a new CD with some help from Chrissy Hynde of the
Pretenders which is hopefully to be released this coming spring. Click here for
the interview: Postcards
from the Beatles.

----------------------------

October 2The University of Ottawa to publish article on
John & Yoko's June 1969 visit to their campus!

Linda Scales, editor of the University of Ottawa's bi-annual
Tabaret magazine, will feature a special article on John Lennon and Yoko
Ono's June 1969 visit to their campus. "We go to print next Friday and are
targeting October 20 as our drop date", said Linda Scales in an e-mail to the
Ottawa Beatles Site.

Breaking news of John and Yoko feature was learned by the Ottawa
Beatles Site on August 8th of this year in an e-mail correspondence from Luc
Brazeau, archivist at the National Archives of Quebec. Luc revealed that he
"Just had a request from Ottawa University; they saw the photos of John &
Yoko on your web site (http://beatles.ncf.ca/proofs.html)
and they asked for the permission to reproduce four items (photos 1, 4, 5 &
14) of Champlain Marcil's photos for an article on John Lennon's visit to Ottawa
in their magazine The Tabaret. Thought you might be interested."

After receiving Luc's notice, a follow-up was done with
Tabaret editor Linda Scales. She confirmed that the article had been
written subject to final editorial approval and that they discovered the John
and Yoko photographs at The Ballad of John and Yoko in Ottawa web page.
The editor also revealed that Hugh Segal, a member on the student union
executive in 1969, was interviewed in preparing the report.

It will be interesting to see what Hugh Segal recalls from the
event after all these years. However, the Ottawa Beatles Site recently did a
little research at the local library on Segal concerning his recollections about
his early years at the campus and the John and Yoko visit. Here is what we
found:

Hugh Segal recalls being elected on the student union executive
and the meeting they had arranged to bring John and Yoko to the campus. In his
book, No Surrender- Reflections of a Happy Warrior in the Tory
Crusade, Segal writes: "In my first year on campus, students began talking
about how many of the people in the student government were consumed with
left-wing ideology. They regularly read literature coming out of Cuba and
engaged in every kind of anti-imperialist activity. But meanwhile, the student
government wasn't doing much with the students' money that was actually for the
students. So in spring of 1969, a group of independents ran for student
government to offer a clear alternative. A Liberal law student, Allan Rock, who
had been a "Youth for Hellyer" activist in 1968 was active on campus in the Law
Society, ran for president."

In his next paragraph, Segal writes in his book that the student
union executive had always traditionally comprised of an even split of
half francophone and a half anglophone -- a true representation of the
unique cultural diversity found on the campus back then and even today! But when
the elections took place, on this occasion the split didn't happen because Segal
ran a very strong campaign on "deadly serious academic issues." Thus he found
himself on the student union executive with Allan Rock.

Soon enough, with John and Yoko's "Give Peace A Chance" activities
peaking in the first few days of June '69 in Montreal, both Hugh Segal and Allan
Rock began to concoct an idea of bringing the two "peaceniks" to the University
of Ottawa: "We set to work redressing the distorted priorities of the previous
council, focusing intently on student needs, with the odd nod to the cultural
imperatives of the day. During our time in office, Allan went down to Montreal
to coax John Lennon out of his "peace" bed with Yoko Ono and dragooned him into
coming to the campus to impart his wisdom to the students. In the spring of
1970, Allan chose not to run again, and I became student council president after
a close two-way race."

Well, those are his recollections. And it is lovely to see the
Tabaret magazine presenting a feature article on John and Yoko's historic
visit to their campus. The publication, no doubt, will only serve as reminder to
all their students to "Give Peace A Chance". This publication makes it apparent
that the University of Ottawa are still very proud to hold a candle to the flame
regarding these two famous "peaceniks" even some 35 years later -- Now
Imagine that!

Biliography: Hugh Segal: No Surrender- Reflections of a
Happy Warrior in the Tory Crusade, pages 16-17, published by Harpercollins,
1996 (ISBN 0-00-255321-X).

- Report filed by John
Whelan.

----------------------------

October 1Legendary photographer, Richard
Avedon, dead at 81

“We’ve lost one of the great visual imaginations of the last
half century,” - David Remnick, editor of The New Yorker.

American photographer Richard
Avedon, famous for taking this 1967 photograph of the Beatles, has passed away
at the age of 81. He died this morning at the Methodist Hospital in Texas from
complications of a brain hemorrhage he recently suffered.

Born in New York in 1923,
Richard was son of a Russian-Jewish immigrant. He studied philosophy at
Columbia University and later studied photography at the New School after
serving as a Merchant Marine during World War II where he took personnel
identification photos.

Considered to be one of the
top ten photographers (and quite possibly the richest) in the world, Richard
once described his approach to taking pictures: "The way I see is comparable to
the way musicians hear, something extra sensory. Not judgmental. I don’t
differentiate between an idea of what is beautiful and what is not. What I see
is a reaffirmation of the many things I need to feel. It has to do with
obsessive qualities, not explainable. I am a natural photographer. It is my
language, I speak through my photographs more intricately, more deeply than with
words."

His work has been acknowledged for
redefining photography and elevating fashion: Richard Avedon is responsible for
starting up the bikini craze in 1959 after doing a photo shoot with Suzy Parker.
"He's the most wonderful man in the business because he realizes that models are
not just coat hangers," famed model Suzy Parker once said.

Avedon's first break occurred in 1944
when he was discovered by Harper's Bazaar art director, Alexey Brodovitch.
He stayed with Harper's Bazaar up until 1966 and then moved on to Vogue as a
staff photographer until 1990. In 1992, he became the first staff photographer
for New Yorker magazine and stayed with the company until his untimely
death.

Apart from photographing the Beatles,
some of his other subjects included Andy Warhol, Brigitte Bardot, Charlie
Chaplin, Jimmy Durante, Malcom X, Marilyn Monroe, Louis Armstrong and Dwight
Eisenhower. He is also a published author of several books: Observations
(1959), Nothing Personal (1964), Portraits (1976), Avedon
Photographs, 1947-1977 (1978), In the American West (1985), An
Autobiography (1993), Evidence: 1944-1994 (1994), The Sixties
(1999), Made in France (2001).

Some of Richard's awards are The
International Center of Photography Master of Photography Awardin 1993
and a National Arts Award for lifetime achievement in 2003. His work has
appeared in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the National
Gallery of Art in Washington.

Event IdeaFestival 2004 will be featuring Sir George Martin
today at the Lexington Convention Center in Kentucky. Martin, who is 78, will be
speaking to an audience about the musical approach taken in creating the Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album.

"The main creators were John and Paul," Martin said. "And George,
to a lesser extent. Paul was quite articulate about what he wanted. He would ask
me about bassoons and trumpets and what ranges they had. With John, we didn't
sit down. We didn't talk things through. He just said, 'You know what to
do.'"

In 1998, Sir George Martin produced his last album entitled In
My Life comprising mostly of Beatle tunes (Pepperland Suite and
Friends and Lovers were his own compositions) and in 1997 he produced his
13th number one hit single, Candle In the Wind, with Elton-John in memory
of the late Princes Diana. Candle in the Wind sold 8 million copies.
Since that time, Martin has had time to reflect on the Beatles legacy: "I didn't
honestly think I'd still be talking about them 30 or 40 years later," he said.
"I thought interest would gradually peter out. But it does seem -- and I've
gotten quite used to this -- each generation, as it comes along, finds Beatles
music out for themselves. And I'm grateful for that. If anything, it was the
epitome of British music in the last century."

Gifted keyboardist Billy Preston who performed on the Let It Be
sessions with the Beatles, will be making an appearance on the CBS television
special entitled Genius: A Night For Ray Charles. The event which is
being filmed at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on October 8 will also feature
BB King, Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Norah Jones, Usher, Mary J. Blige, Al Green,
Reba McEntire, Denzel Washington, Quincy Jones, Samuel Jackson, film maker Spike
Lee and comedian Bill Cosby. Hosting the show will be Jamie Foxx. No air
date has been established as of yet by CBS but this should happen sometime
soon.

Ray Charles musical career has a pretty astonishing history: Ray
played 10,000 concerts, earned 12 Grammy awards and made 250 recordings. He is
considered to be the pioneer of soul music. A Ray Charles Performing Arts
Center at Morehouse College is being established through a $700,000 donation
from David Geffen, founder of Aslyum and Geffen record labels.

Billy Preston -- who incidentally was sidelined from attending Ray
Charles funeral due to a bacterial infection in his kidney -- performed together
on the Ed Sullivan Show on December 3, 1967, with Double-O-Soul which
opened the program. Shortly after that both of them toured together in Britain
where Billy eventually met up with George Harrison and was signed onto the Apple
label. Preston also appears on the Ray Charles Sings for
America album which was released in September 3, 2002.

Related link: Billy Preston's official web site where his biography section
acknowledges the musical influence that Ray Charles had on him.

----------------------------

September 20Yoko Ono donates $17,000 for abused
children

The Sunrise Fund charitable trust of Liverpool has received
a $17,000 donation from Yoko Ono. The trust will be used for the
Barnardo's Keeping Children Safe project for young people experiencing
depression, family breakups or sexual abuse. Said Yoko Ono: "Helping
children and families is such an important thing that I would like to put my own
money into it.

"Barnardo's is a really important charity and needs all our
support.

"They must be brought up in an environment of
safety and security, that is their basic right."

The Sunrise Fund charitable trust was just
one of many functions that Yoko is attending in Liverpool. The other saw her
launch the Liverpool Biennialarts festival.

The Adopt-A-Minefield Charity Auction has
been launched today by Paul and Heather McCartney. The auction will run
from September 21-30 and will feature personal artifacts from Yoko Ono,
Ringo Starr, B.B. King, Shania Twain, Tom Petty, Aerosmith and John Travolta to
name but a few. People wishing to bid on an artifact can do so at Charity Folksweb site which is
hosting the auction. All proceeds from the sale of items will go directly back
into the Adopt-A-Minefield/UNA-USA Organization.

According to a review provided by John Everson,
Ringo Starr appears on a new Jools Holland & his Rhythm & Blues
Orchestra CD entitled, Friends 3. Everson states that "Ringo Starr
reprises his Beatles recording of Boys with a furious swing orchestra
arrangement" which is a departure from Ringo's usual straight-forward
rock'n'roll treatment of the song, penned by Dixon-Farell-Saka. I haven't
listened to the CD but if Everson's overall impressions are correct, Jools
Holland may one day find himself dubbed as the contemporary master of the rhythm
and blues swing. Friends 3 is being released through
Radar/Warner/Rhino.

In a few days, also expect a new Ringo Starr DVD to come out entitled
Tour 2003 which was recorded at the Casino Rama not far from Toronto. It
features Colin Hay, John Waite, Paul Carrack and the incredible Shelia E.
While the DVD lists the usual hits from Ringo, like our good buddy Archer from
99.5 MountainBreakfast with the Beatles in Colorado mentioned on
his web site the absence of Never Without You, a tribute song to George
that he performed on the tour, is sadly missing here. So too, is a rendition of
Here Comes the Sun that they treated the audience on that tour.

However, that said, two back-to-back concerts with Ringo were
actually filmed at the Casino Rama. Of the two concerts, the opener had a
"buffoon in the crowd who shouted out something in the middle of Starr's
introduction to his emotional George Harrison tribute song," wrote Jane
Stevenson for the Toronto Sun. She then added that Ringo yelled back to the
buffoon by saying: "If you've got a bus to catch...you just ruined the moment."
While this probably answers the question as to why the first night of concert
filming wasn't used for this particular number, we are still left wondering if
the second night of filming was good enough to merit a placement on the new DVD?
And we still don't know why a concert performance of Here Comes the Sun
was omitted (only a rehearsal performance take is presented here.) Both
live performances would have been a welcomed inclusion on this DVD from
Ringo.

----------------------------

September 16Yoko Ono awards $50,000 peace
grants!

The Lennon Ono Grant for
Peace biennial program created
two years ago by Yoko Ono, has awarded two peace prizes totaling $50,000 each to
Israeli nuclear whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu and to New Yorker magazine
journalist Seymour Hersh.

Yoko Ono, in a written statement
announced by her publicist Elliot Mintz, described the 2004 honorees as "people
who have spoken out for the benefit of the human race by overcoming extreme
personal difficulties and, in doing so, have allowed the truth to
prevail.

"My hope is that the awards will not only
honor the two recipients for their incredible courage but ask others to follow
their example to take a stand for truth," said Yoko.

The award is being presented to Mordechai
Vanunu for releasing secret information about Israel's nuclear program. For his
actions, Vanunu was imprisoned for 18 years and has only recently been
released.

Journalist Seymour Hersh is receiving the
award for publishing "a series of investigative articles about the Abu Ghraib
prison scandal in Iraq, compiled in a book, Chain of Command: The Road From
9/11 to Abu Ghraib," writes the Associated Press in a report filed on Newsday.com.

Ceremonies and a private dinner for the
two honorees will occur on October 7 at the United Nation's Delegate Room.

September 13A&E in Concert: Paul McCartney in Red Square picks up an
Emmy award!

Some early results are now being made public
concerning the Emmy awards and apparently film director Mark Haefeli and Paul
McCartney will get at least one Emmy for "Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Miniseries, Movie or
a Special: A&E in Concert: Paul McCartney in Red Square," A&E.
News of the award was filed by The
Louisville Channel.com (WLKY 32). The awards will be aired on ABC Television
on September 19th.

The historical information presented in the special by Mark Haefeli was
derived from several sources, one of them being a copy of the book "Strings for a Beatle Bass - The
Beatles Generation in the U.S.S.R." which was passed along to the
director courtesy of Ottawa resident, Yury Pelyushonok, a Russian who lived
under the communist regime and who witnessed first-hand the reforms of
perestroika before coming to Canada.

Congratulations to both Mark and Paul.

How "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey" was
recorded by Paul McCartney

"Rhythm tracks for Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey were cut in Studio B at
CBS Studios on East 52nd Street in Manhattan, with CBS staff engineer Tim Geelan
at the desk", writes Gary Eskow in an August 1, 2004,
article for Mix. The report also has commentary from Hugh McCracken, one
of the musicians who worked on the project. We also learn that Paul's song
Another Day was the first single issued from the Ram sessions, the
album that the former Beatle was recording at the time. To read the detailed
article from Mix, click here.

----------------------------

September 12The Mail on Sunday reports that Geoff Baker,
Paul's publicist has quit

Geoff Baker has apparently quit his position as Paul McCartney's publicist.
In the Mail
on Sunday newspaper edition, states that Baker quit his position because of
tension between himself and Paul's wife, Heather, over his smoking cannabis.
Heather felt that it has a bad influence on Paul and has negative
connotations on her public image as a campaigner for charities which she is
heavily involved with.

A second reason thrown into the mix stems from the fact that Geoff Baker was
not used as publicist on the last European tour. Said Baker: "I lost interest in
the day-to-day process of PR, which is not as exciting as working on a world
tour." Instead, The Outside Organization was used to handle the publicity
for McCartney on that tour.

If his departure holds true, Baker has a backup plan to keep him busy: he
intends to write a novel on fatherhood.

In our January 28, 2004 news entry, our source Robert Tremblay reported that
George Harrison had been in Montréal to negotiate a leasing agreement with the
Cirque du Soleil. This meeting occurred sometime during June of 2001. A Las
Vegas Sun story released today confirms our earlier report that not only was
George Harrison in Montréal at the time, but that Apple has finally signed off
on a contract giving the Cirque usage rights to Beatles songs.

The Cirque production -- which was originally to be based on the Yellow
Submarine movie -- was viewed by Apple to be too '60s-themed and therefore a
more modern theme will be used instead. The theatric troupe is slated to open
their Beatle musical at the MGM Mirage sometime in early 2006. For details
from the Las Vegas Sun, please
click here.

Tonight: Global Television News will feature "Give Peace A Chance" from
Amnesty International

From Robert Harrison, Amnesty International:

Hi John!

I've been telling everyone about the website in Israel;
people are very impressed. Thanks again for spreading the word about our
"Give Peace a Chance" project.

We just did an interview for Global TV
News. It is supposed to run TONIGHT at 6 and 11 o'clock, in
Montreal. They will put the story into the "national feed", so it might
get picked up in other cities across Canada also. They will be showing
part of the music video also.

Keep in touch,

Rob
HarrisonAMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

----------------------------

September 9The Annie Leibovitz photography of John & Yoko

The famous nude photograph of John Lennon embracing
Yoko Ono taken on December 8, 1980, by Annie Leibovitz, was used on the
commemorative front cover of Rolling Stone magazine. Both the photographer and
Yoko Ono recall how the famous photography session unfolded in
this Rolling Stone article.

----------------------------

September 8Canada's Neil Young to share spotlight with Paul
McCartney

Canadian pop star Neil Young, founder of the Rock Bridge School benefit, will
feature a traditional acoustic set of popular music to be held at the Shoreline
Amphitheatre just outside San Francisco on October 23-24. The benefit, now in
its 18th season, will include Paul McCartney, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tony
Bennett along with a variety of other musical acts. For more details, click
here.

When the Beatles became citizens of Kingston, Ontario

Former Kingston mayor William Mills recalls how he presented a plaque to the
Beatles at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto on September 7, 1964, which proclaimed:
“His Worship Mayor W. T. Mills, mayor of the Corporation of the City of
Kingston, hereby proclaims The Beatles to be honourary citizens of our
community.” To read the article, please
click here. ----------------------------

September 71964: The Beatles' first Toronto visit

Michele Finney, a 14-year-old girl in 1964, recalls what it was like during
the first Beatle invasion into Toronto to Sun reporter, Bill Brioux. For the
article, click
here.

----------------------------

September 6Paul McCartney interview (audio!)

The late Barbara Frum of the CBC interviews Paul McCartney in New York,
October, 19, 1984. This very interesting interview with Paul runs about 10
minutes! Click here
to link to the interview.

----------------------------

September 5

IT WAS 40 YEARS AGO TODAY:

A Tribute To The Beatles

Four loveable lads from
Liverpool walked off an airplane at New York’s JFK airport in February 1964 and
the world was never the same. Forty years after The Beatles sparked the British
music invasion, a celebration of the achievements of one of pop music’s most
iconic music groups comes to fruition.

Bullseye Records of
Canada has released a 50 song, 2CD compilation of Beatle songs performed by the
world’s pop community to pay homage to the heroes of an entire musical
generation. “It Was 40 Years Ago Today: A Tribute To The Beatles” is an overview
of the Beatles’ musical output from 1962 through 1970 as done by artists who owe
a debt of musical gratitude to John, Paul, George & Ringo.

The project
has also opened the doors for independent artists across North America whose
current projects are gaining notoriety – The First Time, Cadence, The Lolas,
Cats & Dogs, The Lackloves, Popdudes, Phil Vincent, Jeremy, The Oohs, Geoff
Gibbons, and Steve Barton.

This is a special limited collector's edition 2 CD set which contains all
of the tracks from Milk and Honey and Double Fantasy from John
Lennon and Yoko Ono. There will be six new bonus tracks:

Every Man Has A Woman That Loves Him; Stepping Out; I'm Moving On;
Interview with John & Yoko; Walking On Thin Ice; and Help Me To Help
Myself.

The release date is slated for October 1, 2004, in Germany.

----------------------------

September 41964 Backstage Pass - The
Beatles Behind the Scenes

Ottawa residents are in for a real treat! There is an excellent
Beatle report in this September's free tabloid edition of Forever Young
which is written by Ivor Davis who in 1964, was the correspondent for the
London Daily Express. When you begin reading this lovely report, it
turns out that Ivor Davis was part of the tiny press corps who travelled with
the Beatles during their first North American tour that covered some 23,000
miles and 32 concerts! Ivor's own personal recollections in this article are as
every bit as interesting similar to the ones that Larry Kane described in his
book, Ticket to Ride, which makes this worth picking up at your local
grocery store (the front cover on Forever Young has a very large
photograph of Ed Sullivan and the Beatles' together.)

Best quote from the article comes from Derek Taylor when
describing the Beatlemania phenomenon: "I always saw The Beatles in certain
circumstances as a bit like Tom Thumb, who in Victorian times was wheeled around
like a freak -- a cute freak nonetheless," he observed. "The Beatles were seen
as like that, as novelties or freaks, like a panda with five legs." However,
Ivor Davis differed and concluded his article by saying that "Pop history, of
course, proved the Fab Four were just a bit more than that."

---------------------------

September 2How Elvis survived the faddish
years, and why the Beatles may go on forever

In 1964, Wendy Michener wrote a very lively report on the
Beatles' first motion picture, A Hard Day's Night, for Maclean's
magazine. She did a bit of clever juxta positioning in her analysis when
examining Elvis Presley's latest movie, Viva Las Vegas and the Beatles',
A Hard Day's Night, which we are certain you'll enjoy reading. You can click here to read Wendy's
article. You will also find it listed under our Articles of Historical Interest
(see September 19th, 1964 entry.)

About Wendy Michener: Wendy majored in English and graduated
from Trinity University. Her career as a young writer was shortened by the
fact that she passed away in January, 1969. In her honor, a Wendy Michener
Symposium is held each year at the York University's Faculty of Arts in Toronto.
She was married at the time to Les Lawrence who currently works at Mediaskills
International in Toronto.

---------------------------

September 1Canadian singer Hal Bruce
upstaged by Liverpool police

Seems as though those Blue Meanies were lurking about during
the recent Mathew Street Festival in Liverpool. Hal Bruce, a Canadian from Nova
Scotia, was told to stop performing Beatle music because he did not have the
proper permit to do so. When he stopped, he was in the middle performance of
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band. It was his 120th Beatle song in a row
before being interrupted by police. For details, click
here.

----------------------------

August 29Mystery nurse in Penny Lane
identified!

"Behind the shelter in
the middle of a roundabout/The pretty nurse is selling poppies from a
tray/And tho' she feels as if she's in a play/She is anyway..." -
lyrics to Penny Lane

Paul McCartney described the creation of Penny Lane derived
from real childhood memories: "It was all childhood reminiscences: there is a
bus stop called Penny Lane. There is a barber shop called Bioletti's...It was
based on real things; there was a bank...(and) there's a fire station about half
a mile down the road, not actually in Penny Lane, but we needed a third
verse....John and I would often meet in Penny Lane. That was where someone
would stand and sell you poppies each year on British Legion poppy day; where
John and I would put a shilling in the can and get ourselves a poppy. That was a
memory."

His memories are confirmed by Stan Williams who grew up in
Liverpool and went to school with John Lennon. Stan claims the mystery nurse in
the song is none other than Beth Davidson (who later married Pete Shotton, a
dear and close friend to Lennon). He recalled the story this way: "I have a
vivid memory of being on Penny Lane, for a haircut or something, and Lennon came
up with his pals to talk to Beth and I. Beth was a nurse cadet and she
would only have been about 12 or 13 at the time. We were all laughing and
joking. She was carrying a tray, like they sold ice creams in old fashioned
cinemas from, with poppies for Armistice Day." When the song was released, it
took Stan by surprise: "I remember the first time I heard Penny Lane. As soon as
I heard the lyrics I thought 'Oh God, that's Beth'. I was, and am, absolutely
certain it was her they were singing about."

Apart from the unique lyrical imagery of Penny Lane, the song
is also best remember for the use of a piccolo trumpet played by David Mason
from the London Symphony Orchestra. Said George Martin: "As we came to each
little section where we wanted the sound, Paul would think up the notes he
wanted, and I would write them down for David. The result was unique, something
that had never been done in rock music before, and it gave 'Penny Lane' a very
distinct character."

On March 18, 1967, Penny Lane peaked at the #1 spot on the
Billboard charts in the USA.

August 24TV Alert: Amnesty International to
show "Give Peace A Chance" video on CTV's "Canada AM"

In a message sent today from Robert Harrison, V.P., Amnesty
International, Québec branch, that the June 1, 2004, video that they recorded in
their re-recording of "Give Peace A Chance" will hit the Canadian television air
waves:

"Donald Tarlton and I will be going "live" on Canada AM on
September 2nd, to hype the song and show the music video.

Rob"

Those wishing to download the song for $0.99 can do so by clicking: "Give
Peace A Chance". All proceeds from the sale will go back directly to Amnesty
International. By the way, Paul McCartney is also a supporter of Amnesty
International...please click: Paul McCartney
Charities.

----------------------------

August 21Calling Occupants of Interplanetary
Craft: "World Contact Day 2005 Konvention" and talk of a new Klaatu deluxe
boxed set!

Official souvenir badge from a
Klaatu concert at Barrymore's Music Hall in Ottawa shortly after
their 4th album release entitled: Endangered
Species.

Long
time ago, in a galaxy far far away...three musicians banded together and created
some of the most amazing tunes ever to grace the celestial heavens. Their
identities kept secret for a while, they were simply known at the time as "Klaatu." The band's first album 3:47
EST reverberated across the universe and caused a crack in the cosmic egg as
their music sounded undeniably "Beatleseque." Beatle fans began their own
magical mystery tour of sorts looking for clues in Klaatu's music and album
covers if only to prove that both Klaatu and Beatles were the same
musicians. But alas, over time it was eventually revealed to them
that the
"Beatleseque" group consisted of three very talented Canadian musicians by the
names of John Woloschuk, Terry Draper and Dee Long.

With the release of 3:47
EST, Klaatu recorded four more albums: Hope (exemplifying "classical
rock" at its very best in terms of concept albums); Sir Army Suit
(showcasing a variety of tunes comparable to the Beatles' White
Album); Endangered Species; and finally,
Magentalane. Klaatu's music garnered
legendary status in the music industry which was backed by a cult following
known as Klaatusians! The demand for Klaatu product has
been so strong in the past that two greatest hits
compilations were released: Klaasic
Klaatuand Peaks. As the band's legacy and cult following continued, so
too did the demand for the re-mastering of all Klaatu albums.
Enter now
Jaimie Vernon, President of Bullseye
Records who responded to the call by re-mastering and re-issuing the
first four albums (including their greatest hits album Peaks.) Not only
are those albums currently available, Jaimie is now planning two more major
projects for Klaatu: The first one being a Klaatu reunion for fans to meet with
the actual band members to take place on May 7, 2005 in Toronto. The second
project is a soon-to-be released Klaatu boxed set (it will be presented on both
vinyl and CD format) containing early demos and alternate recording takes that
Klaatu recorded for their catalogue. The boxed set will feature new album cover
artwork by Ted Jones. Ted, by the way, did the art work for four out five Klaatu
album covers: "He did not do 'Sir Army Suit', much to my chagrin," said band
member Terry Draper. The boxed set will include posters, postcards, and other
memorabilia.

These announcements will prove to
be a busy schedule for Bullseye Records. But the Klaatu boxed set, when
released, will be a welcomed joy for Klaatusians! The release could cause the
planet Earth to stop spinning on its axis for a brief moment to take note which
may best be described as: "The Day the Earth Stood Still."

"We're proud to announce that all
three members of Klaatu - John, Terry and Dee - will be attending the Klaatu -
World Contact Day 2005 Konvention. Contracts are being signed this week so
attendance is guaranteed.

By request of the band the date has been
officially set as May 7th in Toronto at the International Plaza Hotel.

This
will occur shortly after a meeting with all three band members around September
13th (when Dee comes into town). We'll be setting out the schedule of events and
going over the final details of the boxed set.

A final list of songs for
the boxed set has been established, but format still seems to be fluctuating. I
have introduced the idea of going to a 3-CD set to accommodate all the material
that John seems to think is necessary for the set -- Terry is reluctantly coming
around. That leaves the DVD as a separate component yet to be
decided.

The vinyl release song list still needs to be finalized....with
a release definitely set for this year as promised. I've seen the final version
of Ted's new painting and everyone has signed off on it. The painting will be
photographed and digitized this week for use on the boxed set, posters,
websites, promotional brochures, etc.

August 17Amnesty International releases new
re-recording of "Give Peace A Chance"

NOTE: People wishing to support Amnesty International (a
non-profit organization) for their social causes can order a copy of the new
re-recording of "Give Peace A Chance" with the link that Robert Harrison has
provided below:

Hello John and Tony,

The new "Give
Peace a Chance" recording was officially released today (click on "English"
in upper right-hand corner of screen).

The verses are sung, in order, by
Nanette Workman (former back-up singer for John Lennon and Rolling Stones),
David Usher (lead singer of group Moist), Justin Trudeau (son of late P.M.
Pierre Trudeau) and Bruno Pelletier (top-selling pop singer in Québec and
France). Some 80 artists sing on the chorus. The video is
incredible, intercutting recent war footage from Amnesty's work overseas with
shots of the musicians in Hotel Room 1742.

The new song's producer,
Donald K Tarlton (a.k.a. "Donald K Donald"), was one of the organizers of the
original 1969 bed-in, and staged the first Plastic Ono Band concert in
Toronto.

On this date, the following announcement appeared on Boston.com
Business via the Boston Globe:

"Converse plans to introduce its newest addition to the Chuck
Taylor All Star lineup today: the John Lennon All Star Peace Chuck. The $60
sneaker features a self-portrait of the late musician and former Beatle perched
on top of the world. Embossed on the shoe's toe cap are the words "Imagine all
the People Living Life in Peace." The Andover sneaker company, a division of
Nike Inc., said the Lennon sneaker is part of a new collection intended to
promote world peace. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to nonprofit
organizations working to foster peace. The company said it will issue a new
artist-designed Peace Chuck every year till peace arrives."

----------------------------

August 12Twist and Shout!

BBC musicologist Spencer Leigh has written another book based on
the Cavern years in Liverpool entitled "Twist and Shout!" According to
Philip Key of the Daily Post, "Twist and Shout! features hundreds of interviews,
most of them on tape and conducted for Leigh's Radio Merseyside programmes. The
well-organised Leigh transcribes all his taped interviews so they are easier to
access." The book also combines some of the original material from Spencer
Leigh's first effort on this subject when in 1984 he published "Let's Go Down
the Cavern".

Apple is delighted to present
its first picture-book version of the classic animated film. This
fantasy-adventure overflows with the spirit of peace, love, hope - and, of
course, music.

Join John, Paul, George and Ringo in the Yellow Submarine
as they set off on a magical adventure to defeat the Blue Meanies and bring
music and harmony back to Pepperland.

The timelessly appealing tale
is published as a fabulously-illustrated picture book in September through a new
partnership of Walker Books (UK) and Apple Corps. The Yellow Submarine
picture book will be printed in eight languages - English, French, German,
Italian, Japanese, Dutch, Norwegian and
Portuguese. Featuring the wit and wizardry
of the Sixties script alongside original artwork from the movie that has charmed
both children and adults through four generations, this is a book to delight
everyone.

To celebrate the launch of the new Yellow Submarine book, The
Beatles have created a website featuring a collection of downloadable puzzles
and games. Print them off, cut them out, colour them in and join them up!

July 30Amnesty International announces release
date for re-recording of "Give Peace A Chance"

The following e-mail was sent to us yesterday from Robert
Harrison, V.P. of Amnesty International:

Dear John and Tony,

I am Vice-President of Amnesty
International for French-speaking Canada, and I would like first to thank you
for posting a newspaper article about our "Give Peace a Chance" re-recording on
your website. I am the person quoted at the end of the article.

Here is an update. The record launch will take place in Montreal
on August 17th. After that time, the new CD single will be available in record
stores and via download on various websites. I can send you the details in a few
weeks, once the web connections are up and running. In the meantime, please take
a look at our worldwide "Imagine" website which has a nice blurb and photo about
the June 1st event:

Editorial: The Ottawa
Beatles Site firmly supports the many excellent initiatives of Amnesty
International. They are actually one of the few bright spots at the moment in a
world that is currently gripped in fear. We will provide a link for the song
download as soon as we're notified from Robert.

And hear Yoko Ono in a special video feature presentation giving
her explicit support for the noble causes that Amnesty International represents.
We have linked back to the Amnesty International web page from where this video
originates from. Please click
here to view the special feature (requires Real Player).

----------------------------

July 26It Was 40 Years Ago Today

In an exclusive report filed to this web site, long-time Beatle
fan Jane Conroy recalls her chance meeting with John Lennon and Yoko Ono as well
as her sister's trek to a Beatle concert in 1964! To read Jane's lovely
write-up, please
click here.

----------------------------

July 23Yoko Ono Interview!

"Life is how we dance, not how we march." - Yoko Ono

Ron Slomowicz of Dance Music brings us up-to-date with the latest
perspectives from Yoko Ono in an article simply billed as: Yoko Ono
Interview.

----------------------------

July 21Chronicle to issue Paul and Ringo books
this fall

USA Today reports the following:

"Each One Believing: On Stage, Off Stage and Backstage by
Paul McCartney (Chronicle, $35): Another memoir, this one focusing on McCartney,
his wife, Heather, and his crew in the days and months after 9/11 when he wrote
Freedom. November.

"Postcards From the Boys (Chronicle, $24.95): Beatle Ringo
Starr loved postcards, and he asked his bandmates and friends to send him one
whenever they traveled. More than 50 of those postcards are reproduced —
writing, doodles and all. October."

----------------------------

July 16"Paul McCartney in Red Square" special nominated for
5 Emmy awards

Both film director Mark Haefeli and
Paul McCartney must be very pleased that their "Paul McCartney in Red Square"
television special is up for 5 Emmy nominations. The announcement was made
yesterday morning by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. We most
certainly hope that both Mark and Paul win in all categories. The results will
be televised from the Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium on Sunday, September 19, on
the ABC Television Network.

The 5 categories are: 1) Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a
Miniseries, Movie or a Special; 2) Lighting Direction (Electronic, Multi-Camera)
for a VMC Programming; 3) Variety, Music or Comedy Special; 4) Sound Mixing for
a Variety or Music Series or Special; 5) Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video
for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special. A complete list of all Emmy
nominations is available either as a "Nominations
(Word)" doc or "Nominations
(PDF)" file from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences web site.

The Paul McCartney in Red Square special was produced by MPL
Tours, Ltd. in association with A&E (the Arts and Entertainment Network).
The program illustrated how Beatles music had impacted on the downfall of
communism (just one of several factors at work) as well as Paul performing in
front of 100,000 fans and highlights from his 3-day tour in Russia during May,
2003.

----------------------------

July 15Update: Beatles' Lost Holy Grail Tapes turns out to
be a sham!

The Abbeyrd Beatles Page reports that two different Beatle fan
club representatives from England, Pete Nash (from the http://www.britishbeatlesfanclub.co.uk/) and Richard Porter (from
the http://www.beatlesinlondon.com/ ) have confirmed that the tapes
in question that were discovered in Australia, have turned out to be material
already bootlegged on an LP entitled "Arrive Without Aging" and from other
bootleg sources. For details, click
here.

----------------------------

July 13The Beatles' Lost Holy Grail Found?

Seems as though the press has been eager to jump on a recent
discovery touted as being possibly (but not likely) Mal Evans' long-lost
suitcase containing alternate versions of "We Can Work It Out" and "Cry Baby
Cry". The 4-hour recording tapes which were marked as "Abbey Road...not
for release" also contained studio banter between Lennon and McCartney
trying out songs that were never completed. The suitcase had a mass of "400
photographs, vinyl records, concert programmes" which were discovered by Mr.
Fraser Claughton in a flea market in Lara, a town near Melbourne, Australia. He
paid $50.00 for the suitcase.

However, speculation remains concerning the
authenticity of the discovery as it may turn out to be merely bootlegged
material that has already been in circulation in one form or another. Noted
Beatle scholar Mark Lewisohn who works for the Apple Record label, had listened
to the tapes over the phone and downplayed the discovery: "From my point of view
there isn't anything lost here," said Mr. Lewisohn.

As usual, one of the big auctioning firms
have shown some interest in the discovery. A spokesperson for Christie's in
London said: "We haven't seen it and we won't be able to say anything more until
we have."

With the recent interview from Paul McCartney in UNCUT magazine,
Paul admitted that during the recording of Sgt. Pepper he took "coke for about a
year around that time. Coke and maybe some grass to balance it out. I was never
completely crazy with cocaine." He also admitted that some of the Beatle songs
were about drugs: "On the earlier albums, we'd have been using those drugs
socially so, in that sense, the drugs informed what we did. A song like "Got To
Get You Into My Life", that's directly about pot, although everyone missed it at
the time. "Day Tripper", that's one about acid. "Lucy In The Sky", that's pretty
obvious. There's others like that make subtle hints about drugs on The Beatles'
music."

But not all in the pop industry agreed back then with the position
that the Beatles were taking on drugs. Certainly Paul McCartney himself made a
public admission on June 19, 1967, that he had taken LSD four times. "Something
ought to be done about the Beatles' publicly talking about using LSD," said
singer/songwriter Neil Diamond in a 1967 interview. "It was very stupid on their
part." Diamond, who admitted to trying both marijuana and LSD at least once, had
this to say about the experiences: "I once tried marijuana. It was a very
disappointing experience. The effect was no more than that of a screwdriver.

"When I used LSD - just once - I stopped being aware of myself.
Then it became a nightmare in color -- colors that weren't there. I wasn't
rational. It didn't wear off for a couple of days and its effect continued for
much longer.

"I know of a musician who used LSD and wound up in a home for the
insane.

"Most users, I think, are losers. They think they're turning
themselves on -- but actually they're turning themselves off -- trying to escape
from the world.

"The musician who took LSD -- he could have avoided his 'trip' and
accomplished the same thing by taking rat poison!"

July 2Bill Eppridge photography: The Beatles Backstage and
Behind the Scenes

The Allen Lambert Galleria in Toronto is showcasing 84 rarely-seen
photographs of the Beatles that were taken by Bill Eppridge of LIFE magazine.
The collection, which is on display from July 26 to August 27, includes photos
from the CBS archives highlighting the Beatles debut on the Ed Sullivan show in
1964.

The Allen Lambert Galleria is located on 181 Bay St. For
more details, phone: (416) 364-4693.

----------------------------

June 24The making of Yellow Submarine

A new book tells the story of the making of the brilliant animated
movie. One of the four writers of the film, Al Brodax, has published Up
Periscope which tells the full story.

----------------------------

June 22Former Beatle Pete Best to perform in Ottawa at
Barrymore's Music Hall, July 6!

Show time for the Pete Best and his band begins 8:00 p.m. with
advance tickets costing $20.00 and possibly $25.00 at the door on opening day.
According to the manager at Barrymore's, the opening act is "Moonlight Graham".
Some tickets are available through Ticketmaster at: (613) 755-1111.

----------------------------

June 20Paul is Back In the U.S.S.R.

A crowd of 60,000 Russian Beatle fans watched Paul McCartney
perform in the opulent Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg. This was Paul's first
performance in that city and his 3,000 concert gig. The show which was sold out
was delayed for one-and-a-half hours partly because of security measures as
concertgoers were screened through three security checks. As a result, traffic
was paralyzed around the central square.

For McCartney, it was his second appearance in Russia, a country
were they once banned Beatles music as being a corruptive influence from the
West. Under communism, fans would secretly listen and hide their Beatles music
in fear of reprisal from Soviet authorities. One such Russian, Malsky, told the
Associated Press that he recalled a school friend being punished for listening
to the Beatles.

In spite of the crackdown, Beatles music had a very positive and
liberating effect on Russians. Said Kolya Vasin: "Like many of my compatriots,
who lived in the oppressive Soviet atmosphere, I was kind of a scared person
with many complexes," he said. "I never had friends.

"The Beatles knocked all that out of me.

"Their music taught me to enjoy life. And they brought many
friends into my life."

Over time, the Beatles music would eventually become one of
several different factors leading up to the downfall of communism.

McCartney is to perform on
Sunday before an estimated 50,000 fans in St Petersburg’s Palace Square, in
front of the Hermitage Museum.

The concert, McCartney’s first in St Petersburg, will mark the
peak of the northern city’s famous White Nights, when the sun barely dips beyond
the horizon before starting its upward climb again.

Vasin, who has invited McCartney to visit
him while he is in St Petersburg, has dedicated the last four decades of his
life to honouring the Beatles. (See also: St. Petersburg
Times;The
Scotsman).

Former Apple General Manager, Alistair Taylor, passes away

Just a few weeks shy of his 69th birthday, on this date, James
Alistair Taylor has passed away in Chesterfield, Derbyshire. He is
survived by his widow Lesley Gillibrand (the couple did not have any children).
It is reported that he died from "a short bronchial illness". An obituary on
Alistair has been published by BBC music historian, Spencer Leigh. For details,
please click here.
Beatle historian Martin Lewis has also paid a tribute to Alistair Taylor. For
his report, click here. See also
the report in Matlock
Today.

The now defunct Toronto Telegram wrote an article on October 7,
1967 concerning the Beatles meditation with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi during the
month of August of that year. When it was written, it occurred roughly around
same the time when John and George were seen on the David Frost show on
September 29, 1967, chatting about drugs and meditation. Folk singer Donovan
Leitch -- who was present for the second retreated with the Beatles in February
of 1968 -- describes the Maharishi as a "man who's going to tell us
something." Leitch went on to say: "McCartney said the same thing and I think
Lennon said the same thing -- 'We're going to go over and he's going to tell us
how to really lay this peace on earth because we know this man is advanced.' We
were looking for this guy to tell us something. The main thing with the
Maharishi for me was that he laughed. We realized that we were also turning the
Maharishi on. It was two ways. The press were outside. The Beatles, one Beach
Boy, me, and Paul Horn, we were inside. The Maharishi taught us how to
meditate."

John Lennon would later profess that the song, Sexy Sadie, was all
about the yogi: "That was inspired by Maharishi," he told David Sheff for
Playboy. "I wrote it when we had are bags packed and we were leaving. It was the
last piece I wrote before I left India. I just called him 'Sexy Sadie.' I
was leaving the Maharishi with a bad taste." Hindsight is 20/20 as they
say and Lennon certainly did not see through the Maharishi during their first
retreat based on a report that was filed by the Toronto Telegram entitled: Foursome Plan to Become 'Spiritual
Guides' -- Beatles Now on a Mind-Bending Kick.

The drumbeat of success for Ludwig could not have been better
timed when on February 1964, the drum kit that Ringo was using on the Ed
Sullivan show was beamed by CBS television into American homes thereby giving
the manufacturer instant recognition. What happened next was the enormous
commercial demand for that very lovely black oyster pearl drum kit. A very
interesting article which chronicles that history is available by clicking: The Night That Changed The
Music World.

May 27CBC Arts News: "Photo exhibit celebrates
John and Yoko's Bed-in for Peace"

A news article from the CBC is highlighting the photography of
Gerry Deiter. Mr. Deiter, who at the time was taking pictures for "Life"
magazine, was present throughout the John and Yoko peace campaign in Montreal.
The article, "Photo
exhibit celebrates John and Yoko's Bed-in for Peace" contains an external
link to the Elliot
Gallery which is currently displaying some of Mr. Deiter's rare photography
of John and Yoko's bed-in .

----------------------------

May 17Québec artists to re-create
"Give Peace A Chance" at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel

To commemorate the 35th anniversary
of John Lennon's "Give Peace A Chance", on June 1 a group of Québec artists will
go to the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in room 1742 to re-record Lennon's classic peace
anthem. Donald Tarlton, the brainchild behind the idea, was actually
present when Lennon and Ono recorded the original hit song. To this very day he
still remembers what Lennon said before introducing the new peace song to the
participants in the room: "He had such clear focus and such clarity of thought,"
said Tarlton. "He said, 'From the United Nations to all the power the power
brokers in the world, there are 10 million reasons why things can't be
done -- but it boils down to a simple message: Give Peace A Chance.' As he said
it, he started to sort of hum it and sing it."

Rock group La Chicane will accompany
the various Québec artists to re-record the song which will be issued by
BoomBox, either available over the internet or over the counters at music
stores. All proceeds from the sale of the song will be donated to Amnesty
International which has been approved by Yoko Ono.

Interestingly, CBC director Paul
McGrath is currently preparing a television documentary on 35th anniversary of
the recording of "Give Peace A Chance." McGrath has gone to great lengths
in recruiting as many of the original participants who sung along with John
Lennon and Yoko Ono when they recorded their peace anthem on June 1, 1969.
Donald Tarlton was interviewed by McGrath and is expected to make an appearance
in the show. And in an email correspondence dated March 3, 2004, to John Whelan
of the Ottawa Beatles Site, McGrath describes some of the celebrities lined up
for the CBC program: "We will interview Andre Perry when he comes to
Montreal between April 12 and 23. I interviewed Tom Smothers in San Diego last
week, and his yarns are likely to provide the funniest moments in the doc.
He tells the story of John correcting his guitar playing, and tells it with a
twinkle in his eye and fabulous timing. Most people in the room for the
recording say Petula was not there at that point (Smothers insists she wasn't)
but it's likely she heard John working on or rehearsing the song beforehand, and
that's good enough for inclusion in our doc. We'll be talking to her in Atlantic
City between April 5 and 12."

The working title of the CBC
television special, "Give Peace A Song," is expected to be aired sometime in the
winter of 2005. For further details about this documentary, please visit the CBC
website: http://www.cbc.ca/givepeaceasong/

----------------------------

May 14Remembering
Brian: And They Called Him 'Mister
Epstein'

The Ottawa Beatle Site proudly
presents a retrospective on the man who made the Beatles millionaires in a 1967
report by Sandy Gardiner of The Ottawa Journal, entitled: And They
Called Him 'Mister Epstein'. Sandy Gardiner, in case you didn't know,
was the first journalist who made use of the phrase "Beatlemania" into a North
American newspaper report. His article is also listed here at the Ottawa Beatles
Site.

----------------------------

May 5Beatles
Contract Sold At Christie's

The original revised management
agreement between the Beatles and Brian Epstein was sold at Christie's auction
house for $220,306. The document is dated October 1, 1962,
was estimated to fetch between $44,832 and
$62,765 but tripled in value when it was sold to a
private collector. Interestingly, a questionnaire for the Record Mirror that was
filled out by the Beatles was also sold at the auction house. It had revealed
some very flattering remarks about Brian Epstein: "Without Brian none of us
would have had some of the wonderful chances which his management has opened for
us," wrote Ringo Starr while Paul McCartney described Epstein as a "good
manager: astute, sympathetic, good lad, dad!" The questionnaire which also
contained comments from George, was sold for $25,644.

Other Beatle items auctioned at
Christie's: Lennon's leather collar that he wore in 1967-1968 sold for $247,000;
a colored felt pen drawing by Lennon sold for $24,700; Lennon's pen-and-ink
drawing ("Happy Fish"), sold for $23,465; a letter signed by Lennon sold for
$13,585; and a 1966 custom-made Vox Kensington guitar, used
by both John and George, fetched $240,000. The guitar had been previously owned
Alex Mardas as a gift from John Lennon.

----------------------------

May 1, 2004"THE
BEATLES with Tony Sheridan - The Beginnings in Hamburg - A
Documentary"

An excellent DVD exploring the early years with Tony Sheridian and
the Beatles has been released by Universal Music. The DVD, entitled "THE BEATLES
with Tony Sheridan - The Beginnings in Hamburg - A Documentary", runs 2 hrs
17min, features interviews from Tony Sheridan, Roy Young, Klaus Voormann, Astrid
Kirchherr, Horst Fascher and the Beatles first manager, Allan Williams along
with a host of other contemporaries from that period.

Tony Sheridan, the central figure in the documentary, provides
insight to the origins of the song selection for the tracks that he and the
Beatles recorded for Polydor. While the Beatles only recorded 7 tracks with
Sheridan, featured here are 16 of those tracks done by the pop star. As each
song is played, still photography is introduced linking the viewer back to the
days of the Kaiserkeller, the Reeperbahn, the Top Ten Club and the Star-Club
adding historical value to the documentary. While some photos will be familiar
to fans, there are enough interesting "never-before-seen" photography of the
locales in Hamburg along with group photos of the Beatles and Tony Sheridan.
Also included in the still photography segments are rare and unique photographs
of Stuart Sutcliffe, presumably taken by Astrid Kirchherr, Stu's girlfriend at
the time.

The interviews are informative with
the best contributions coming from Tony Sheridan, Allan Williams and Roy Young.
Tony Sheridan tells his stories with much candor and at times enthusiasm while
the Beatles first manager, Allan Williams, lives up to expectations in the
similar elk that he wrote in his first book, "The Man Who Gave Away The
Beatles". In the documentary, Beat Brother Roy Young remains true during the
interviews and his answers are similar to an interview that he gave to the
Ottawa Beatles Site a few years ago (see: A Roy Young Interview). But the
only drawback found in this documentary happens to be the interviews of the
German participants: they present their answers in German with English subtitles
appearing at the bottom of the screen. This includes invaluable comments from
Klaus Voormann, Astrid Kirchheer, Jurgan Kramer, Sound Assistant for the
Sheridan/Beatles recordings and Horst Fascher, Sheridan's manager and a few band
members from The Rattles and others which sometimes takes away from the
entertainment value (it might have been better if the producer had used "English
voiceovers" rather than using English subtitles for the spoken German
responses.) That said, the historical value of this DVD gets a close "topermost
of the popermost" rating for exploring the early beginnings of The Beatles and
Tony Sheridan --definitely a must-have in your Beatles collection.

Historical value: **** / 5
stars

Entertainment value: *** / 5
stars

----------------------------

April 29, 2004"Lennon" Musical
Heading for Broadway

Both the Scotsman.com and
Playbill news services are reporting that a musical play on the life and
times of John Lennon will make its debut at the Curran Theatre in San Francisco
on February 1st before heading on to Broadway in 2005. The idea for the
play was conceived by Don Scardino. The musical is setting out to illustrate
that John Lennon was more than just a musician. Said Scardino in an interview
with Playbill: "He always seemed to be ahead of the curve. Or, by
example, the curve followed him. He was such a leader for a certain generation,
particularly, that he's emblematic of the times he came through."

There are thirty songs scheduled for
the play (approved by Yoko Ono) which include: "Imagine," "Instant Karma," "Give
Peace a Chance," "Mind Games", "Gimme Some Truth" "Working Class Hero," and
"Whatever Gets You Through the Night". Ten actors will be used to depict the
various stages of John Lennon's life from Merseyside to New York where the pop
star resided.

The play, which has been three years
in the making, has Scardino teamed up with Allan McKeown (producer of Jerry
Springer - The Opera). It is expected that both the casting and creative
team will be announced at a later date.

----------------------------

April 28, 2004New
Book: "THE Ringo Starr Enclyclopedia" by Bill Harry

Bill Harry, founder of Mersey Beat
magazine, has written a 170,000-word book recognizing the humour, talent and
courage of Ringo Starr. Entitled "THE Ringo Starr Enclyclopedia" the book
will be published by Virgin Books on May 4, at £12.99 (or about $30.00 Canadian
and $22.00 American.) Dave Charters of Liverpool Daily Post, highlights
this new book along with an interview from Bill Harry in an article entitled:
"Starr
Is Brought to Book".

----------------------------

April 19, 2004Last known
sketch by John Lennon up for sale

What is believed to be the last known sketch with John Lennon's
signature on it, is on sale for $325,000 at Moments in
Time web site.

Rabiah Yazzie Seminole, the original owner of the valuable note
had been working as a switchboard operator at the Record Plant in Manhattan on
December 8, 1980. In a sworn affidavit, Seminole states that "as John
Lennon and Yoko Ono were leaving Record Plant they gave me a drawing done by
John Lennon and signed by him and Yoko Ono." Rabiah recalls receiving the sketch
at about 10:25 p.m. that night. A very short time later that night, just
before 11:00 p.m., Lennon was tragically gunned down by a deranged fan outside
the Dakota.

For years the sketch had been on Seminole's bedroom wall and not
many knew about its existence. She has decided to put the famous last note
by Lennon up for sale in order to raise money for her horse sanctuary, "The Blue Horse Mukwa Equine Retirement and
Rescue Center", a non-profit organization which she runs in Chesapeake,
Virginia. Her horse sanctuary takes in horses who have been either
neglected or abused, some with broken legs or gunshot wounds. The sanctuary was
damaged last year by a hurricane causing a financial hardship to keep it
running. Said Rabiah: "I didn't want to capitalize on John's death, but I think
he would have wanted to help the horses."

---------------------------

April 2,
2004Cultural reform activist,
John Sinclair, declares today's music as "sappy and lame"

Cultural reform activist John
Sinclair has denounced most of today's music scene as being "sappy and lame" --
devoid of any content that reflects reforms or protests concerning today's
social injustices. His comments appeared on The State News - Michigan
University Independent Voice web page. Said Sinclair: "It's been a negative
example. I think they've used the music by making it sappy and lame for the past
30 years since The Eagles and Lindsey Buckingham. They started to sap the
progressive content of the music that was developing at the time, and now it's
made by machines. They eliminate the possibility of originality and
intelligence. You can do it, but you won't be rewarded. I always say, 'If you
take the pledge of poverty, you can do whatever you want with art in America,
because they don't care. It's rough.'"

Sinclair, a vanguard of the 1960's
cultural radicalism, was arrested and jailed in 1969 for possession of two
joints of marijuana. He spent 29 months of his ten-year sentence before his name
became elevated into the international spotlight by John Lennon and Yoko Ono.
The couple held a "Free John Now" concert in 1971, at Ann Arbor's Crisler Arena.
"John was terrified going onstage," recalled Stu Werbin. "He was following
Stevie Wonder, with a make-shift band, trying out new material. He worried that
people might start yelling for 'Hey Jude'." Lennon opened the set with
"John Sinclair" which was followed up with "Sisters, O'Sisters" by Yoko Ono and
then "Attica State". But it was the lyrical lines in "John Sinclair" that
became the most revealing of all in terms of just how unfair Sinclair's lengthy
jail time was. "The lyrics referred to recent revelations that the CIA was
involved in heroin trafficking in Southeast Asia on a massive scale while
Sinclair rotted in jail for selling two joints", wrote Jon Wiener in his book
"Come Together John Lennon In His Time". The concert and music worked...three
days later Sinclair's sentence was overturned. Wiener also revealed that
Sinclair recalled Lennon with great fondness: "Lennon was very groovy - if that
term means anything today. A real sweet, warm, nice, outgoing type of
guy."

Today, John Sinclair still holds the
same viewpoints as he did back then concerning the laws on drugs. "I don't want
to reform them; I want them thrown out," he told Michigan State News
reporter A.P. Kryza. "I want the Dutch model, only more. America has built a
huge industry for the right-wing law enforcement who have benefited from this
more than anyone admits....We're as close to a police state as you have in a
democracy."

Sinclair is still active in music and
poetry. He will be making an appearance at the Creole Gallery, April 2, at 8:00
p.m. in Lansing backed with the Blues Scholars and will be performing with Glow
on April 3, at 4:20 p.m. at the Hash Bash hullabaloo in Ann Arbor.

----------------------------

March 27, 2004Historical
Flashback: The Beatles were shut out at Expo 67

You would think that the Beatles
after having received their prestigious M.B.E. (Member of the British Empire)
awards in 1965, that Britain would logically have honored the group in their
pictorial gallery at British pavilion during Canada's centennial, Expo 67.
Apparently they did not! In a report filed by Richard
Jackson of the Ottawa Journal on April 29, 1967, the COI (Central Office of
Information) in London did at one point consider using a photographic portrait
of the Beatles at Expo but were instead passed over for the bad boys of rock and
roll, the Rolling Stones! The Stones image was displayed along with other
historical notables such as "Shakespeare, Christopher Wren, Drake, Wellington,
Disraeli, Victoria the great and all the illustrious hundreds of others" wrote
Jackson. While the honor at the time might well have pleased Mick Jagger and the
rest of the Rolling Stones and their fans, staff members at the British pavilion
reacted negatively. Wrote Jackson: "The COI just better watch it. For there are
30 glorious English girls serving as hostesses in the pavilion and they're
blazing mad, and waiting for the publicists of the information office to just
dare show up. 'If the Beatles haven't earned a place of honor, who has?' asks
the head hostess Dorothy Rogers, 28, from Lytham St. Annes in
Lancashire."

Meanwhile, the American pavilion had
given the nod to their own pop icon, Elvis Presley, along with photographic
images of Clark Gable, Gary Cooper and Marilyn Monroe and whole slew of
other famous notables.

----------------------------

March 23, 2004Lennon art trial
secrets revealed

"A prosecution over John Lennon's
"erotic" drawings may have failed because of implications for major art
collections" writes the BBC news services. For details, click here.

----------------------------

March 12, 2004Professor M.L.
Liebler of Wayne State University to visit Ottawa!

* "Liebler is a tremendous source
of poetry energy in The Motor City and beyond." - John Sinclair

Professor M.L. Liebler who teaches a Beatle course at Wayne State
University in Detroit, will be making an appearance here in Ottawa on Sunday,
May 9, from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Royal Oak II located at 161 Laurier
Avenue across from the University of Ottawa. This will be Liebler's first visit
to Ottawa promoting his book "The Moon a Box: Poems of this World" with a new CD
scheduled for release this April. His poetry readings will be a combination of
"beat poetry/slam poetry music" featuring his Magic Poetry Band with Alex
Lumelsky (guitars) and Faruq Z. Bey (sax).

However, this will not be the professor's first visit to Canada.
Said Liebler, "I have read quite a bit in Canada: Windsor, Toronto, London,
Guelph and elsewhere." At the moment, Professor Liebler is on tour in Russia
giving a Beatle course and poetry readings in St. Petersburg (March 11-13),
Moscow's "Russia The Amerikan Poetry Center" (March 14) and the YMCA at
Novosibirisk, Siberia (March 17-19).

An
accomplished and respected poet/writer, Liebler has also released several
musical CD's and has performed with such internationally known musicians such as
Al Kooper, Country Joe McDonald, Mike Watt of The Minuetemen, Jorma Kaukonen of
the Jefferson Airplane and Prof. Louie (The Rick Danko Band and producer of the
final three The Band cds). He has written several books of poetry and one
publication in particular, "Stripping the Adult Century Bare", contains two
personal tributes to the late John Lennon: "Beatles Forever (The Day John Lennon
Died)" and "John Lennon Comes Back to New York City to Pay Homage to Bob
Dylan".

Some
of M.L.Liebler's literary awards are:

AWARDED Wayne State County Council for Arts &
Humanities Arts Award, 2002; FINALIST American Book Award 2002 and
Great Lakes Book Award 2002; Awarded Art 2002;AWARDED ArtServe/MCACA
Writer in the School for Michigan status for 2001-2004;AWARDED Wayne
State University's Board of Governors Book Award, 2001;FINALIST
Paterson Literary Book Award, 2001.

For
more on Professor M.L. Liebler and his literary work and accomplishments, please
visit his home web page: http://www.mlliebler.com/

----------------------------

March 11, 2004Alfred George
Bicknell, Beatles chauffeur, died

On March 9, Alfred Bicknell, the
Beatles chauffeur from 1964 to 1966, died at Bandbury, Oxfordshire. He was 75.

Brief "bio" on Alfred George
Bicknell: Alf was born in Haslemere, Surrey, on October 28, 1928, and was
educated locally. His early jobs included working as an "apprentice butcher and
as a circus clown" wrote the Telegraph and he also "did three years' National
Service in the Army". During the 1950's, Bicknell became a chauffeur to a number
of foreign embassies in England. By 1964, he was highly recommended to and hired
by Beatles manager, Brian Epstein. Alf drove and worked with the Beatles on
their tours and in August of 1965, both he and the band met Elvis Presley at the
pop-stars Bel-Air home. On another occasion, both Alf and the Beatles met up
with legendary American folk singer, Bob Dylan. However, one of the low-points
during touring occurred on July 1966 when the band was roughed up in the
Philippines. George Harrison once said: "Alf Bicknell lived moment to moment
with the Beatles through those years....Anyone who was beaten up by Imelda
Marco's bully squad is a friend of mine." With regards to Beatles recordings,
Bicknell made a proud appearance on "Yellow Submarine". Said Alf: "I did some of
the sound effects and sang in the chorus. You can hear the anchor going down
just be a voice says, "Full steam ahead, Mr. Bo'sun." That was me with an old
tin bath and a piece of chain." When touring stopped in 1966, so too did
Bicknell's employment with the Beatles. He continued being a chauffeur but this
time with the New Christy Minstrels in America. For three years, Bicknell also
chauffeured Lord McAlpine. He also gained employment at the Tilbury
Construction. Bicknell would later share his Beatle memories with fans by
attending various Beatle conventions and through various publications: In 1989,
Bicknell released "Baby, You Can Drive My Car!" that was co-written with
Beatles expert Garry Marsh. In 1995, saw the release of "Alf Bicknell's
Beatles Diary" which was in the form of a book and video package and in
1999, he co-wrote with Alasdaire Ferguson, "Ticket to Ride: the ultimate
Beatles tour diary!" Alf Bicknell is survived by his wife Jean and their
son.

----------------------------

March 06, 2004Baby, You're A
Rich Man

Yesterday, Reuters reported on the
web that Paul McCartney fortune "is bigger than the combined wealth of Elton
John, Mick Jagger and Madonna, according to a new rich list." McCartney's wealth
is now listed at 725 million pounds -- or to put this into a North American
perspective, that would be $1,761,871,422.35 (Canadian) or $1,336,175,000.00
(American) based on the exchange rates taken on this date from the Universal
Currency Converter.

----------------------------

March 05, 2004Beatles "1"
still a top Billboard seller

After 172 weeks on the charts, for
the week ending March 13, 2004, Billboard is reporting that Beatles "1" is No.
2 in terms of popular pop catalog albums being sold in the marketplace.
Last week "1" was also in this same position on Billboard. Since the album's
November release in 2000, Beatles "1" has sold over 25 million copies
world-wide. Meanwhile, "Let It Be Naked", which was Paul McCartney's idea to
release the upgraded version of the Beatles 1970 "Let It Be" album, continued to
slide down the charts. It was at No. 130 on Billboard's top 200 album chart as
of February 6, 2004.

----------------------------

February 28, 2004Were You
There for the Recording of "Give Peace A Chance?" If so, C.B.C. television
is looking for you!

The C.B.C. television is working on a
new documentary that will focus on the recording of "Give Peace A Chance". The
documentary will air sometime in the Winter of 2005. But in order to make this a
reality, the C.B.C. needs to find the people who participated in the recording.
This includes "the unidentified Krishna devotees playing hand drums and finger
cymbols on the song," said the C.B.C. "Chances are they have all told their
stories to many, many people - who wouldn’t?" If you were one of the lucky ones
there for the recording of "Give Peace A Chance", please click on the following
link and make contact with the C.B.C.:

February 25, 2004John Trust of
The Mersey Cats shares his memories of the Cavern

The Mersey Cats comprised of
various Mersey Beat musicians from the 1960's British pop scene that had
performed at various charity events in Britain.

Trust writes the
following...

John,

The web site is absolutely
brilliantly put together and is a credit to your time and effort.

I am a member of The Mersey Cats and
we had a couple of events which brought a lot of us old timers together.

Ray from the Dennisons is now the man
from the Prudential (insurance) and happily married with 2 daughters.

Clive (Dennisons drummer) is now a
soap opera star (he only ever wanted to be an actor).

Our old rhythm player Stan
Alexander played with 3 bands (Cy Tucker, Foremost and can't remember 3rd.) at
Merseycats first party.

My old neighbour and mate Snowy Fleet
(he was a rhythm guitarist in Liverpool before emigrating to Australia mid 60's)
also flew in from Perth -- he is best remembered for his part in an Aussie band
(The Easybeats) with a hit called Friday On My Mind (he played drums
then).

I lived in Perth WA in the 1980's and
Snowy and I both did a couple of radio shows dedicated to Liverpool sound.
(Snowy is a fairly affluent house builder in Perth, but some years ago the band
played a sellout tour around Australia -- after the lead singer had been
released from prison where he was doing time for drug offences).

My comments about the Beatles are
based upon the general feeling of a lot of people at the time -- I had known
them for a few years before their fame.

Brian Epstein made The Beatles (it
was business) they were the first real manufactured band -- Lennon's prolific
song writing put them at the top (and lets face it some of those songs will
still be classics in 50 years time (my favourites did not achieve single's
status, but were tracks on some of the first albums).

The Beatles last show on the cave
after fame found them was an Easter Bank holiday weekend -- all the bands (and
we were among them) had a big card school running in the dressing room and it
was a fantastic weekend.

The Stones played Liverpool when The
Beatles were in town and my band was playing the Blue Angel (Alan is another
club manager with a memory of convenience -- he only remembers his input into
the big bands) imagine our surprise when John and Paul arrived (John brought his
psychedelic Rolls Royce) and they were followed by The Stones -- they all dashed
out to view John's new Roller.

Most people can't imagine what it was
like to play at the cave, even before it was world famous it was pretty
intimidating --trying to get the sound right with all those vaulted arches and
pillars (hot steamy and jam packed almost every night).

The front row harridans (the cave's
official veto crew of some not very pretty females) stared at the bands and
decided if you would come back.

If you had a gig somewhere else
before your cave spot you had to fight your way through the packed crowd with
amps and instruments -- interfering with Cavern Stompers (the official dance due
to lack of space for free movement of limbs).

Epstein opened a nightclub in a
Liverpool backstreet (it was very posh inside and a drink cost £1.00 a pint --
normal pubs you could buy 6 pints for that amount of money -- my band The
Dions was the first act to play there and we played there a number of times
(Epstein and Lennon came a couple of times together and we thought hello what's
all this then? -- Eppy offered to sign us up, but my dad said no, so eppy
recommended another agent (I quit the band shortly after that -- the new agent
had wandering hands).

Cilla used to work at the cave and
got her chance through eppy on Lennon's referral, I loved her first hit and
backed numerous artists at clubs singing that song over the next 10 years.

We could enter into a working
relationship, with me passing snippets of memories etc -- especially when I meet
up with a lot of the other lads.

The Liverpool bands would have
continued to play and enjoy themselves -- most of us did it for the personal
pleasure -- as we made little money and had expensive equipment -- The Coasters
could not turn pro with Billy (Billy J) as all the rest of the group were
actually serving apprenticeships in various trades, my band had a guy studying
chemistry another accountancy and so on -- some of the bands found fame after
Beatlemania, but most of us just enjoyed playing (I played in a pipe band as
well as groups and did 2 stints in the percussion section of Liverpool
philharmonic youth orchestra -- I also occasionally played with big dance bands
and jazz bands).

Joe Morrello (Dave Bruebeck five
drummer) came to Liverpool and gave a 1 night drum clinic -- nearly 300 drummers
attended and only a couple of big heads worked for many different groups around
the city that night -- most clubs actually closed due to shortage of drummers --
I don't think any of the guys at the drum clinic ever turned pro and none really
wanted to.

I've had the honour to appear on the
same bill (spot before) as Buddy Rich and his band (I nearly retired after that
show --haven't played drums in public since though).

The long awaited deluxe-box set
containing the solo work that George Harrison did on his Dark Horse label, has
been released by Capitol records. It comes with a booklet that contains press
clippings, unseen photographs and illustrations. A 75-minute DVD containing 7
music videos (fully restored) is also included in the box-set.

"George had lots of work lined up in
1999, but his priority was to reissue his entire catalog," said Olivia Harrison.
"He began that process by the remastering of All Things Must Pass in
2000. The Dark Horse Years were to follow. These songs are especially
dear to me because they chronicle events in our life together. If you want to
know what George was doing those years just listen to his
music."On March 15, 2004, George will be
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and will be later broadcasted on
VH1 on March 21 between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.

----------------------------

February 20, 2004Possible forthcoming book on the '60s from artist Simon Posthuma
("The Fool")

Good evening John,

I just past by at your beautiful
website on The Beatles, which I found through a link on Beatle City. Actually I
was looking for works of the Dutch Simon Posthuma who painted John's Rolls in
the Sixties. At present Simon Posthuma presents parts of his work in Zaandam, a
viallage just north of Amersterdam / the Netherlands. With his girlfriend
Marijke, he left the Netherlands 50 years ago to tour around and finally ended
in London where he met The Beatles and (where) he started to work for their
Apple Corp.

During this week our national Radio
2, broadcasted the "Week of the Sixties", with lots of good music on The
Beatles, Stones and many, many others, 24 hours a day during 5 days.

During an interview which was aired
last Thursday afternoon, I suddenly heard Simon Posthuma talking about his years
in England, while working with and for The Beatles and so I learned that he
returned to his native village Zaandam. He also announced that he would soon
present a 350 pages new book on the Sixties.

Best wishes,

Cor van BreukelenPuch 66, Puch and Tomos clubThe Netherlands

----------------------------

February 19, 2004Free public
celebration of George Harrison Day in L.A.

The City of Los Angeles has declared Sunday 22 February 2004
GEORGE HARRISON DAY. A plaque will be unveiled at the base of the George
Harrison Tree in Griffith Park at 3.00pm and there will be a live musical
performance by Keith Chagall and 'The Fab Four' tribute band. Special guests
Billy Preston and Jackie Lomax will also be in attendance. Jackie intends
playing a song he has written as a tribute to George, "Friend Of Mine."

---------------------------

February 16, 2004Soul singer Doris Troy passes away

On this date, former Apple Records
recording star, Doris Troy who lived in Las Vegas, dies in hospital from
emphysema. She was 67.

Originally born as Doris Higgensen on
January 6, 1937, in Bronx, New York, she was the daughter of a Baptist preacher
where early on she was exposed to gospel music. Doris later abandoned
gospel music in favor of the jazz group, the Halos. While honing her songwriting
abilities, Doris Troy concentrated on background singing for artists such as
Soloman Burke; Chuck Jackson; and The Drifters. By 1963, she co-penned "Just One
Look" with her friend Gregory Carroll. While the song was only recorded by Doris
in demo form, Juggy Murray of Sue Records who was presented with a copy of the
song, failed to move on it. Determined to get "Just One Look" into the
marketplace, she then approached Jerry Wexler at Atlantic Records who decided to
release the song exactly in its demo format...it ended being a major Top Ten hit
in the USA. The song was then covered by the Hollies in 1964 and charted a the
No. 2 spot turning "Just One Look" into a smash hit once again. (Incidentally,
the composition has also been covered by Linda Ronstadt, Harry Nilsson and Bryan
Ferry.)

Doris Troy's soul career spanned 40
years. She moved to London in 1969 where she was soon signed on by Apple
Records. In an earlier interview, Troy recalls how that came about: "I got a
call from Madeline Bell inviting me down to a recording session that Billy
Preston was doing for Apple. George Harrison was producing "That's the Way God
Planned It" and Billy and I agreed to write some songs together for his Apple
album. That's when George asked me about my own ability to record. As it turned
out, I wasn't signed to anyone. Within days, we had three agreements: one for me
as an artist, one as a writer and one as a producer." Her debut album on Apple
was simply entitled Doris Troy, was released in Nov. 9, 1970, in the USA
featuring some big name performers in the rock music industry: George Harrison,
Eric Clapton, Billy Preston, Bobby Keys; Peter Frampton, Ringo Starr to name
just a few. While under contract with Apple, two singles were also released:
Ain't That Cute and Jacob's Ladders. She was also backup
singer for the following rock artists: Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the
Moon"; Carly Simon's"You're So
Vain"; George Harrison's"My Sweet Lord"; The
Rolling Stones' "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and Dusty Springfield's"In the
Middle of Nowhere".

In March, 1983, a musical play based
on Doris Troy's life entitled Mama, I Want To Sing, opened at the
Heckscher Theatre in Harlem. The play was written by her sister Vy Higgensen and
brother-in-law producer Ken Wydro. By 1984, Time magazine proclaimed the
musical as one of New York's 10 best stage shows to be presented in the city.
The non-Broadway musical, which saw Doris Troy casted in the role of her
mother "Geraldine", was successful enough to take on the road across the USA
between 1984 to 1998. In that time frame the musical also made appearances in
London and Japan. The New York Times indicates that the "show is to
begin a 20th-annivesary run at Williams C.M.E. Church in Harlem" on February 21,
2004.

----------------------------

February 12, 2004Couple recall meeting not-so-fab Beatles

In a February 8th, e-mail
correspondence to the Ottawa Beatle Site, Barbara Kaufman writes:

"I met the Beatles in approximately
1959 (the late 50's) in the Cavern Club. My husband played there frequently with
a traditional (dixieland) jazz band called "The Saints" and the Beatles were one
of the intermission bands, along with other local Liverpool bands i.e., Billy J.
Kramer, Gerry and the Pacemakers etc., who were trying to make a name for
themselves. In fact, I feel sure I spoke to them on their first gig at the
Cavern."

Both Barbara and her husband Merton
Kaufman were published by the London Free Press here in Canada. There are two articles on the same page:
The first one deals with the 40th anniversary of the Beatles where the couple
recall their fond memories on how the Beatles presented themselves during the
Cavern days. The second article is a tribute to George Harrison which was
published shortly after his passing.

It was Barbara and Merton's wish to
have these articles published at the Ottawa Beatles Site and they hope you will
enjoy reading them. We have archived their reports under "Articles of Historical
Interest".

----------------------------

February 7, 2004"Beatles U.S.
arrival anniversary"

Neena Chowdhury of the Canadian
Press, interviews Ottawa
Beatle Site proprietor, Tony Copple, on the 40th anniversary of "Beatlemania".
Neena also interviews Bhesham Sharma, a music professor at the University of
Western Ontario.

----------------------------

January 31, 2004

On the eve of the 40th anniversary of
"Beatlemania" and the Beatles invasion into the United States, on this date the
Beatles Timeline has received 75,000 visitors! Thanks to one and all who have
visited this Beatles time capsule.

Reuters is reporting that the MGM
Mirage Casino in Las Vegas has shown interest in having the Cirque du Soleil
perform a theatrical version of "Yellow Submarine" that would replace
illusionist Roy Horn who was critically injured last October after being mauled
by a tiger.

Alan Feldman, spokesperson for the
MGM Mirage, claims that its "fairly likely" that the theatre troupe would
perform at the Casino but the Cirque du Soleil has denied any deal with the
Mirage casino concerning a Beatles show. The renewed interest from the Mirage
goes back to 2001 when, according to Reuters, the "Beatles' company, Apple Corp.
Inc., confirmed in 2001 that a Cirque show in London was under consideration,
but Beatle George Harrison, who was friends with Cirque Chief Executive Guy
Laliberte, died shortly after that announcement and the show never
materialized."

The Ottawa Beatle Site supports the
Reuters position that George Harrison had a keen interest in seeing a theatrical
play based on "Yellow Submarine" be performed by the Cirque du Soleil. According
to local musician Robert Tremblay, who is a very big fan of George Harrison, had
this to say in an e-mail to Ottawa Beatle Site proprietor, Tony Copple, dated
04/03/2003: "I was wondering if you were aware of the
fact that George Harrison came to Montreal during the Grand Prix racing car, in
June 2001. He was also there to negotiate the leasing of the copyright of Yellow
Submarine to Le Cirque du Soleil. He attended a party at Guy Latraverse's house
(well known Montreal producer), where he played guitar with professional
musicians of the Montreal scene. He also met Robert Marchand, CEO of Musique
Plus (music video channel). I hold this information from an interview given at
Radio Canada on behalf G.H. death in November 2001."

Some time has now
passed since George Harrison's death and it would be a nice tribute to George if
Apple records were to provide some renewed interest and leadership in making
this project become a reality. The Cirque du Soleil has showcased some
very entertaining theatrical productions even to a point where they have been
captured on film and released on DVD: Journey of Man; Saltimbanco; Dralion;
La Nouba; Quidam; O; Verakai and Mystere. If a theatrical
version of "Yellow Submarine" were done by the Cirque, one ponders what
financial rewards might come if it were later released on a DVD? Certainly this
idea of a theatrical production and the contracts that George Harrison was
preparing at the time with the Cirque is worth looking into once
again.

----------------------------

January 24, 2004Give Peace A Dance interview with Yoko
Ono

We're pleased to see that the Ottawa Beatles Site isn't the only
publisher that feels that John Lennon and Yoko Ono's peace activities from 1969
became just one of several factors that led to the eventual ending of the
Vietnam War. This months
publication of Rhythm magazine has a report filed by Jeff Tamarkin who makes a
similar claim: "John and Yoko...campaigned for peace together. Just how
effective their efforts may have ultimately been in turning the tide against the
Vietnam War we might never really know. But make no mistake: they did have an
impact." Tamarkin goes on stating that by John and Yoko's peace bed-in's at
Amsterdam and Montreal where they ended up recording and releasing the timeless
peace anthem, Give Peace A Chance, the couple had become, in effect, "masters of
the staged media event."

The feature article for the magazine provides a very basic but
excellent overview of the life and times of Yoko Ono. It also includes a small
interview with Ms. Ono along with some very touching photography work of the
avant-garde artist done by Jeffrey Apoian.

Only 10 days after the Harrison
family had filed a $10 million federal lawsuit against Dr. Gilbert Lederman of
having coerced George Harrison in his last remaining days to sign an autograph
on his son's guitar, the doctor has now agreed through his attorney that the
signed guitar "will be disposed of privately," writes Reuters
press.

The suit had alleged that Lederman
held Harrison's hand as the musician wrote his name on the guitar "with great
effort and much obvious discomfort" even though the failing rock star had
initially resisted such a request. Harrison was also forced to sign
his name on two cards for two of Lederman's daughters but the settlement now
reached will include also include having the doctor dispose of them privately.

The settlement, announced in a
Brooklyn courtroom before U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis, acknowledges
that the medical treatment by Lederman was not an issue in this particular
claim. The agreement also cites that the Harrison family, in return, will
give a new guitar to Ariel Lederman as a replacement. Ariel, the 14-year-old son
of the doctor, was the owner of the guitar that has Harrison's signature on
it.

Beatle photo exhibit now in
Smithsonian Museum

A photo presentation entitled: "The
Beatles! Backstage and Behind the Scenes" will be on display at the Smithsonian
Museum at the institutions "National Museum of American History". There are 81
black and white photos on display were culled from the CBS archives along with
the photography work of Bill Eppridge from LIFE magazine. The event covers the
Beatles first invasion into the United States including photos from their first
Ed Sullivan broadcast.

The display at the Smithsonian Museum
is from January 16 - July 5, 2004. It has been organized Vickie Rehberg,
president of ArtVision Exhibitions of Baca Ration, Florida.

The photo collection was previously
viewed at the Provincial Museum of Alberta in Edmonton and
there are ideas that Italy might be the next stop for this photo
display.

-----------------------------

January 14, 2004Another Grammy
award for the Beatles

On this date, the Recording
Academy announces that the hit song, Let It Be, will be inducted into
the "Grammy Hall of Fame."

First, I would like to wish you and
Tony Copple a happy new year 2004, full of "new" Beatle material.

The book is a real success in France
where it already sold a few thousand (I've heard something like 6-8000 copies,
and it's only a beginning). It's a good thing when you know that the Beatles are
really not a priority in French culture!

Warmest Regards,

Eric

Pretty impressive sales figures for
the first three months, Eric! Especially in light of the fact that France is the
only country where this book is being published at this time. Hopefully, Eric,
you'll soon find an American publisher...certainly these sales figures can only
help advance your cause in getting your excellent Beatle book out into the North
American marketplace. Fans wishing to know what topics Eric covered in his book,
we refer you to our November 10, 2003 news item on this page. You
can also immediately jump to some of the highlights from Eric's
new book by clicking the following two links:

When I posted my own personal tribute
to Randy Bachman's message board, I truly wasn't expecting any comment from any
band member at all, but Mick Dalla-Vee, bass guitarist for Randy Bachman's Band,
sent out a personal e-mail to me on this date which reads as
follows...

Hey Fellow Beatlie
Nut

Hi John,

Very impressive! I play bass with
Randy Bachman's Band and happened by your post. Lot's of great work on your
site. A friend of mine who hasn't played since the early sixties (he's a
property developer now) played at the Cavern at the same time as the big boys.
His band was called "The Karacters" and they have a prestigious spot on the wall
in the new cavern. He has told me that he wants to regroup his old band while
they're all still alive and rehearse to play a couple of the old venues
(including the fabled Cavern - which I've yet to visit), and he wants me to play
drums (the drummer's too weak these days). The fact that I haven't played drums
in over twenty years still makes me fairly up to snuff in his
eyes...lol.

I played with a Beatles Show called
Revolver for a bit, and on two occasions we were escorted to the stage in THE
Rolls Royce....quite a buzz!!!

I also have a picture that I found in
a book, of my wife at a very young age in Maple Leaf Gardens sitting
directly behind the Beatles Stage - where her 'front row' tickets were.
Broke her heart at the time apparently, until I dug up the photo and had it
blown up framed for her.

Keep on doing it - it's great to have
a passion isn't it?

Cheers,

Mick

Thank you Mick, for your kind words
and for also sharing with us some of your own Beatle recollections...the Cavern
gig sounds definitely like a great idea! Give us an update if you decide to go
over and we'll post it here for fans to read.

To learn more about Mick Dalla-Vee's
musical background, please visit his excellent website at: http://www.mickdallavee.com/ and for
information on Randy Bachman of B.T.O. (Bachman-Turner-Overdrive) and Guess Who
fame, please visit Randy Bachman's personal web site at: http://www.randybachman.com/. Be sure to
check out Randy's new CD "Every Song Tells A Story" where he provides both a
narrative and musical journey on how he wrote some of his most legendary songs
ever written as a member of B.T.O. and the Guess Who. And those amazing bass
guitar riffs that you hear on "Every Song Tells A Story" album is none other
than Mick Dalla-Vee himself!

By the way, if you don't yet already
know, Randy Bachman played with Ringo Starr during the 1995 All-Starr band tour.